Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 2-3 hours
Total Time: 3 hours
Servings: 4-6
Cuisine: Hawaiian
Course: Main Course
Serve With: Poi, diced tomatoes, green onions
Ingredients:
- 1 3 1/2-pound boneless pork butt roast
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 2-4 tablespoons Hawaiian alaea sea salt or kosher salt
- 4-6 banana leaves, rinsed
- 2-4 tablespoons Mesquite-flavored liquid smoke
Directions:
- Preheat oven to 400°F.
- Rinse banana leaves and pat dry.
- Remove netting from pork butt and discard. Coat entire roast with about 2 tablespoons vegetable oil. Next season well with about 2 tablespoons of the Hawaiian sea salt, working it into all the crevices on both sides. You can cut slits into the meat to penetrate more deeply if you prefer.
- Next do the same with the liquid smoke, coating with about 2 tablespoons, or more to your taste.
- Over a cooking flame, soften banana leaves on both sides until they turn shiny and pop slightly. This just makes them more pliable.
- In a large roasting pan, place a nice long strip of aluminum foil (enough to wrap the roast). Place the banana leaves in strips on the bottom and wrap the roast. Place more banana leaves on top, tucking underneath the roast. Wrap very well and securely with the foil and tighten both ends.
- Place in the oven at 400 F until the internal temperature reaches 160 F, about 20-25 minutes per pound of meat. When the roast is done remove it from the oven and let it rest and cool for a few minutes. Be sure to save the pan drippings when you open the foil!
- Note: You can also make this into a kalua pig slow cooker or kalua pig crock pot recipe by placing the roast in the slow cooker on low for about 16 hours.
- Now, pull pork apart with your fingers into a mixing bowl, then pour the pan drippings on top. Taste, and then season to your personal taste with more Hawaiian salt and liquid smoke.
- Serve on a bed of poi topped with diced tomatoes and green onions; inside a Taro roll with coleslaw and barbecue sauce, or inside a cheese quesadilla with a side of pineapple or mango salsa. Hawaiians also enjoy Kalua Pig and cabbage, which is made by sauteeing the shredded beef with fresh cut cabbage or even sauerkraut.